Monash University researchers have trialed a new system demonstrating how humans and robots can team up on the job to make construction faster, safer and less physically demanding.
KAIST has unveiled a neuromorphic semiconductor-based artificial sensory nervous system that lets robots ignore safe, familiar stimuli and react quickly to dangerous ones, much like living organisms.
The human brain demonstrates significant advantages in memory, intuition, and emotional generation, which are precisely the challenges currently faced by AI technology. For instance, the human brain ...
Trust between humans and robots is improved when the movement between both is harmonized, researchers have discovered. Trust between humans and robots is improved when the movement between both is ...
In a groundbreaking development, scientists have found a way to give robots a sense of touch without relying on expensive artificial skin. This innovation, spearheaded by a team from the German ...
The Electric State brings directors Anthony and Joe Russo back to big-budget filmmaking with a reported $320 million spectacle, Netflix’s most expensive production to date. Set in an alternative ...
Plus: Ukraine could lose access to its best weapons if the US pulls military aid This is today's edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the ...